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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University College Cork - National University of Ireland, Cork |
| Country | Ireland |
| Start Date | Nov 01, 2023 |
| End Date | Oct 31, 2028 |
| Duration | 1,826 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 101088453 |
YOUTHCLIMATEJUSTICE is the first large-scale transnational examination of youth justice in the climate crisis.
In climate activism/litigation, under-18s are often leading on a political issue on a global scale – this is unprecedented in human rights law. Yet most children’s rights literature examines children as victims in the climate crisis.
We know from other areas of law (e.g. family, criminal etc.) that justice processes are ill-suited to children, and have to be tailored to their needs. A body of work on ‘child-friendly justice’ has arisen to deal with this.
YOUTHCLIMATEJUSTICE examines how child-friendly justice, and consequently children’s rights scholarship, is transformed by youth climate activism.
The project proposes the ‘post-paternalism’ hypothesis – traditionally it is assumed that children are ‘given’ rights by adults such as the right to be heard, but youth climate activists are taking control of their own rights, e.g. in justice systems.
YOUTHCLIMATEJUSTICE aims to work beyond contemporary paternalistic approaches to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child; examining intergenerational dynamics in this ‘post-paternalist’ climate context.
This will be done through three work packages examining youth climate justice in: 1.judgments 2.litigation and 3.participation.
This transdisciplinary project will include innovative methodology including IDEAL causal modelling of case law data; surveys; and participatory action research (in Barbados, Canada, Ireland, Nepal, and South Africa) to theorise transformation in children’s rights through youth climate action.
It is a groundbreaking democratic endeavour whereby children can shape both academia and human rights for a post-paternalist world.
Outputs include a new evidence-informed framework on Child-Friendly Climate Justice [CFCJ]; to facilitate both academic and legal/social transformation in the field, a CFCJ Research Centre, and an experimental initiative to embed CFCJ in a live climate case.
University College Cork - National University of Ireland, Cork
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